Friday, November 18, 2011

 

Grab-bag of BC oddities for the weekend ...

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Kash Heed 'could have been premier'

By Michael Smyth
The Province November 18, 2011


Liberal MLA Kash Heed, former police chief of West Vancouver and a former provincial solicitor-general, was found guilty of election campaign violations.

[Please visit Smyth's column for gorgeous photograph by: Ian Lindsay, PNG files. BC Mary.]

It was one of the weirdest recent political scandals in a province known for its political weirdness.

It was also one of the greatest "what if" stories in B.C. politics.

What if Kash Heed's career hadn't imploded over a shabby dirty-tricks scam — a two-bit piece of political trickery that probably didn't help him much in the last election anyway?

"He could have been premier," says Barinder Sall, Heed's former campaign manager. "He had everything going for him."

Heed had the political smarts and the politician's gift of the gab. He had the rugged good looks and confident swagger of a successful cop. He had the burning ambition and workaholic's metabolism. [Argghh...gag me with a spoon! - BCM.]

It didn't hurt that he was a favoured son of the politically powerful Indo-Canadian community.

And it all came crashing down over a cheap anti-NDP election flyer that looked like it was produced with scissors, a photocopier and a bottle of Elmer's glue.

Sall admitted financing the sleazy Chinese-language flyer that appeared in Heed's riding in the dying days of the 2009 election. He was fined $15,000 and placed on probation.

Heed was fined $8,000 for going about $5,000 over his campaign spending limit, though he escaped more serious charges related to the illegal flyer, of which he claimed ignorance.

Sall was determined not to take the fall quietly. Since pleading guilty, he's been dishing the dirt on Heed, his former mentor, who remains a Liberal MLA.

Sall released embarrassing emails, in which Heed trashed his Liberal colleagues.

He told me about a secret phone in Heed's office that the former solicitor-general called "the bat phone."

"Kash thought he was Batman," Sall told me. Ouch.

But Sall's most serious charge was that the Heed campaign exceeded legal spending limits by about $40,000 — not the $5,000 determined by a special prosecutor.

On Thursday, Elections B.C. said Sall had not produced enough fresh evidence to warrant a new investigation, and the case was officially closed.

"I'm surprised by that," Sall told me. "I would have been happy to co-operate with them, but they didn't even contact me."

Heed seemed relieved and did not rule out trying to revive his battered career.

But I'd say it's all over now, except for the debate about what might have been.


Read more HERE and HERE:

http://www.theprovince.com/news/Kash+Heed+could+have+been+premier/5731241/story.html#ixzz1e4s6oHLX

http://www.theprovince.com/news/Kash+Heed+could+have+been+premier/5731241/story.html

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Lessons of a Police Chief: Militarization is a Mistake


By Norm Stamper
Seattle Police Chief who oversaw Seattle’s crackdown on WTO protesters, learned the dangers of militarization. His advice for a creating a police force that truly serves and protects communities.

YES magazine, THE NATION - Nov 16, 2011


They came from all over, tens of thousands of demonstrators from around the world, protesting the economic and moral pitfalls of globalization. Our mission as members of the Seattle Police Department? To safeguard people and property—in that order. Things went well the first day. We were praised for our friendliness and restraint—though some politicians were apoplectic at our refusal to make mass arrests for the actions of a few.
Then came day two. Early in the morning, large contingents of demonstrators began to converge at a key downtown intersection. They sat down and refused to budge. Their numbers grew. A labor march would soon add additional thousands to the mix.
“We have to clear the intersection,” said the field commander. “We have to clear the intersection,” the operations commander agreed, from his bunker in the Public Safety Building. Standing alone on the edge of the crowd, I, the chief of police, said to myself, “We have to clear the intersection.”
I’m convinced it is possible to create a smart organizational alternative to the paramilitary bureaucracy that is American policing.
Why?
Because of all the what-ifs. What if a fire breaks out in the Sheraton across the street? What if a woman goes into labor on the seventeenth floor of the hotel? What if a heart patient goes into cardiac arrest in the high-rise on the corner? What if there’s a stabbing, a shooting, a serious-injury traffic accident? How would an aid car, fire engine or police cruiser get through that sea of people? The cop in me supported the decision to clear the intersection. But the chief in me should have vetoed it. And he certainly should have forbidden the indiscriminate use of tear gas to accomplish it, no matter how many warnings we barked through the bullhorn.
My support for a militaristic solution caused all hell to break loose. Rocks, bottles and newspaper racks went flying. Windows were smashed, stores were looted, fires lighted; and more gas filled the streets, with some cops clearly overreacting, escalating and prolonging the conflict. The “Battle in Seattle,” as the WTO protests and their aftermath came to be known, was a huge setback—for the protesters, my cops, the community.
More than a decade later, the police response to the Occupy movement, most disturbingly visible in Oakland—where scenes resembled a war zone and where a marine remains in serious condition from a police projectile—brings into sharp relief the acute and chronic problems of American law enforcement. Seattle might have served as a cautionary tale, but instead, US police forces have become increasingly militarized, and it’s showing in cities everywhere: the NYPD “white shirt” coating innocent people with pepper spray, the arrests of two student journalists at Occupy Atlanta, the declaration of public property as off-limits and the arrests of protesters for “trespassing.”
The paramilitary bureaucracy and the culture it engenders—a black-and-white world in which police unions serve above all to protect the brotherhood—is worse today than it was in the 1990s. Such agencies inevitably view protesters as the enemy. And young people, poor people and people of color will forever experience the institution as an abusive, militaristic force—not just during demonstrations but every day, in neighborhoods across the country.

Much of the problem is rooted in a rigid command-and-control hierarchy based on the military model. American police forces are beholden to archaic internal systems of authority whose rules emphasize bureaucratic regulations over conduct on the streets. An officer’s hair length, the shine on his shoes and the condition of his car are more important than whether he treats a burglary victim or a sex worker with dignity and respect. In the interest of “discipline,” too many police bosses treat their frontline officers as dependent children, which helps explain why many of them behave more like juvenile delinquents than mature, competent professionals. It also helps to explain why persistent, patterned misconduct, including racism, sexism, homophobia, brutality, perjury and corruption, do not go away, no matter how many blue-ribbon panels are commissioned or how much training is provided.
External political factors are also to blame, such as the continuing madness of the drug war. Last year police arrested 1.6 million nonviolent drug offenders. In New York City alone almost 50,000 people (overwhelmingly black, Latino or poor) were busted for possession of small amounts of marijuana—some of it, we have recently learned, planted by narcotics officers. The counterproductive response to 9/11, in which the federal government began providing military equipment and training even to some of the smallest rural departments, has fueled the militarization of police forces. Everyday policing is characterized by a SWAT mentality, every other 911 call a military mission. What emerges is a picture of a vital public-safety institution perpetually at war with its own people. The tragic results—raids gone bad, wrong houses hit, innocent people and family pets shot and killed by police—are chronicled in Radley Balko’s excellent 2006 report Overkill: The Rise of Paramilitary Police Raids in America.
Even as police officers help to safeguard the power and profits of the 1 percent, police officers are part of the 99 percent.
It is ironic that those police officers who are busting up the Occupy protesters are themselves victims of the same social ills the demonstrators are combating: corporate greed; the slackening of essential regulatory systems; and the abject failure of all three branches of government to safeguard civil liberties and to protect, if not provide, basic human needs like health, housing, education and more. With cities and states struggling to balance the budget while continuing to deliver public safety, many cops are finding themselves out of work. And, as many Occupy protesters have pointed out, even as police officers help to safeguard the power and profits of the 1 percent, police officers are part of the 99 percent.

Just the Facts: It's a Locking-People-Up Problem
The American problem with mass incarceration is less about crime than about how—and who—we lock up.
There will always be situations—an armed and barricaded suspect, a man with a knife to his wife’s throat, a school-shooting rampage—that require disciplined, military-like operations. But most of what police are called upon to do, day in and day out, requires patience, diplomacy and interpersonal skills. I’m convinced it is possible to create a smart organizational alternative to the paramilitary bureaucracy that is American policing. But that will not happen unless, even as we cull “bad apples” from our police forces, we recognize that the barrel itself is rotten.
Imagine the community and its cops united in the effort to responsibly “police” the Occupy movement.
Assuming the necessity of radical structural reform, how do we proceed? By building a progressive police organization, created by rank-and-file officers, “civilian” employees and community representatives. Such an effort would include plans to flatten hierarchies; create a true citizen review board with investigative and subpoena powers; and ensure community participation in all operations, including policy-making, program development, priority-setting and crisis management. In short, cops and citizens would forge an authentic partnership in policing the city. And because partners do not act unilaterally, they would be compelled to keep each other informed, and to build trust and mutual respect—qualities sorely missing from the current equation.
It will not be easy. In fact, failure is assured if we lack the political will to win the support of police chiefs and their elected bosses, if we are unable to influence or neutralize police unions, if we don’t have the courage to move beyond the endless justifications for maintaining the status quo. But imagine the community and its cops united in the effort to responsibly “police” the Occupy movement. Picture thousands of people gathered to press grievances against their government and the corporations, under the watchful, sympathetic protection of their partners in blue.

Norm Stamper was Seattle’s police chief from 1994 to 2000, and a police officer for 34 years. He is a member of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition and the author of Breaking Rank: A Top Cop’s Exposé of the Dark Side of American Policing. He wrote this article for the Nation.
Copyright © 2011 The Nation — distributed by Agence Global


Source, with some photos, HERE:

http://www.yesmagazine.org/peace-justice/lessons-of-a-police-chief-militarization-is-a-mistake


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North Van's Grumps has left a new comment on your post:

What were bloggers called during the BC Rail Trial..... well whatever it was, times have changed, by the looks of it.

On Bobby Virk's lawyer's Website, visitors are encouraged to take a look at a link

Bloggers Comment on Kevin McCullough

And it all comes back to BC Mary's blog....... and bloggers.

There appears to be Tip of hat to you
BC Mary, from Kevin McCullough.



Posted by North Van's Grumps to The Legislature Raids at 18 November, 2011

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Comments:
The sad part is what is cited as qualifying Heed to be Premier. Nowhere is there a mention of honesty, integrity, a sense of caring, an ability to serve the electorate, or even a word or two about thinking and problem solving.
 
thank christ Kash Heed didnt make it as AG or Premier. And thank christ Dave Basi was stopped in his tracks too.

Or was it HEED and BASI who stopped themselves?

All the political correct bs aside, these brown men have comfimed a stereotype of indo canadians.
 
Danneau, you are so right. The virtues that the writer describes appears to be one built for confrontaction, not problem solving, not empathising, and certainly not one who would resitribute wealth to the less fortunate.

The virtues HEED displays, are self centeredness, cockiness, greed, and 1970s style flash and dazzle with zero substance.

And Basi was right in there with these virtues too ... yet he turned out to be more corrupt that carters got pills.

When will we learn and not repeatedly elect scoundrals like HEED(and Campbell for that matter)?
 
Nice post which an effort would include plans to flatten hierarchies; create a true citizen review board with investigative and subpoena powers; and ensure community participation in all operations, including policy-making, program development, priority-setting and crisis management. In short, cops and citizens would forge an authentic partnership in policing the city. Thanks a lot for posting this article.
 
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